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<faculty>
   <name/>
   <firstname>Claudia</firstname>
   <lastname>Radel</lastname>
   <suffix/>
   <pronouns/>
   <department>Environment &amp; Society (ENVS)</department>
   <position>Department Head | Professor | Environment &amp; Society (ENVS)</position>
   <background/>
   <location>NR 201B</location>
   <campusMapURL/>
   <phone>(435) 797-0516</phone>
   <email>claudia.radel@usu.edu</email>
   <hours>By Appointment</hours>
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   <cvURL>https://usu.box.com/s/a4s9skzyrnoiubhqzcpas1d2vorcd9nt</cvURL>
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   <expertise/>
   <bio>Dr. Radel joined Utah State University in 2005, after receiving her Ph.D. in Geography from Clark University. Her research explores the changing nature of natural resource-based livelihood strategies for individuals, households, and communities in the rural Global South. She is interested particularly in how gender ideologies and practices relate to livelihood strategies and land-use and environmental change. Her research also examines the gendered nature of resource access, control, and decision-making. Current projects include (1) research on gender, conservation, and agriculture in communities surrounding Mexico's Calakmul Biosphere Reserve; and (2) research on labor out-migration and its relationship to climate change and land access in Central America. In 2011, she was awarded a CAREER research grant by the National Science Foundation.
																																																									Prior to her doctoral studies, Dr. Radel worked as a community development consultant in Barranquilla, Colombia. She holds a Master's in Public Affairs and a Certificate in Science, Technology, Environment, and Policy from Princeton University's School of Public and International Affairs, where she studied international development. She received her Bachelor's degree from Brown University, with a dual concentration in Environmental Studies and Comparative Development Studies. Dr. Radel has spent time living and working in various countries in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, including a year attending the University of Zimbabwe as a Rotary Scholar in a graduate program in tropical resource ecology. More recently, she co-led the development of university curricula on climate change for a consortium of universities in Southeast Asia, serving as a gender and environmental social science expert.</bio>
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   <anumber>A00391631</anumber>
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